I mean i can't work out whether your argument is:
people should stop making music at 130, in which case i agree, it's a stranglehold.
people should stop djing at 130, in which case i also agree.
OK, so we agree!
I mean i can't work out whether your argument is:
people should stop making music at 130, in which case i agree, it's a stranglehold.
people should stop djing at 130, in which case i also agree.
OK, so we agree!![]()
The techno black bloc listening to their Drumcodes and Adam Beyers and feeling like the chosen ones cos they got into berghain are maybe one of the most annoying factions in dance music nowadays. How did that stuff get to be so popular? I feel my energy draining so fast when that shit starts droning on.
Third - apologies for what I wrote earlier, although I was deliberately trolling (not you specifically, techno people in general) I didn't mean to be inflammatory.
In truth I've always felt a sort of tribal emnity towards techno/house cos I got into drum n bass when other people I knew got into techno and house and I always felt like they looked down on drum n bass as if their chosen genres were more cleverer. Also because I was constantly listneing to 170bpm + music I thought house and techno were slow and boring. Dubstep was probably my gateway to slower dance music... (Although I'd succumbed to jungle by then too).
My techno taste tends towards either soulful/funky detroit stuff (theo, omar s, et al.) or super hard distorted stuff (i was really into the clairvoyants on Rinse for a while, although no doubt this isn't as hard as techno gets). Actually one of my best clubbing experiences ever (which did involve drugs I'm afraid) was seeing Marcel Dettman in a small club in Bristol.
In any case, the pompous attitude I detect in techno supremacists is more of a european, continental thing. People dressed head to toe in black. You know who I mean.
this is the thing though the mr. c types logically lead to that because they'd already reduced techno
to a chin strokers thing. rob hood is minimal but funky as fuck. beyer never has been.
Beyer was always a poor mans Surgeon. Some revere his early work, but back then the real chin strokers (I was one of them) did regard Beyer as lacking finesse. Functionalism in a bad way.
I read thru the thread + it did eventually get into some interesting areasFuck house. Ban all new music at this tempo. Moratorium on 4 to the floor as well. Worse than rock backbeats and guitar solos.
Idk about that thoHave been down this trail before and not really found anyone interested enough to talk about it. Always end up asking myself if maybe originality is something we could shift the main focus away from. Maybe it's not the be all end all. Maybe it's just the byproduct of capitalism and mass production. People used to be fine listening to the same old shit for centuries before this era. In many parts of the world they still do. We've been over this before, right? Songs older than anyone can remember. Replayed over and over. Still bringing the same joy. Can easily transpose this into the hippy side of my point, which is moving away from a materialist mentality and some form (not sure what exactly) of a return to some prior state of mind. I think my shroom trip confirmed all of this to me. There I was listening to old music and getting as fresh a buzz as I would having heard it for the first time. In fact plenty of the tracks I heard on that trip were new to me, but very much within the confines of the framework. So maybe the problem is us and our externally imposed need for the new. Could this be bypassed? I mean, let's face it, you hear an old classic you haven't heard for years and it catches you. Smile plastered across your face. It's part nostalgia, part just sheer awe at the work. Timeless is timeless.
Oi!all them weirdos from fucking swindon in london
but it's not as if prior historical moments were frozen in time
and timeless isn't just timeless, it's subjective, both personally + culturally
I don't know to what extent an innate human desire for the new exists, but I'm sure it somehow does exist
what you're discussing basically sounds like folk culture, non (or yet to be, anyway) monetized
and that is something capitalism, especially its current iteration, has been doing away with and/or altering
this is antithetical to folk culture, which must be captured, made into a product, branded, monetized
what weneed is a year 0. a back to basics and a dialing up of intensities.